Thursday, 22 December 2016

Q Acoustics M4 Sound Bar

At first glance, the Q Acoustics M4 soundbar doesn’t exactly look like the stuff of home entertainment dreams: It lacks the glamorous design of many of its 2016 rivals. It only manages a 2.1 speaker count at a time when we’re starting to see soundbars now offering 10 channels and Dolby Atmos decoding. There’s not an HDMI input/loopthrough in sight. 

Plus, it marks British hi-fi brand Q Acoustics’ first toe-dip into soundbar waters - and surely even a brand as critically acclaimed in the hi-fi world as Q Acoustics couldn’t be expected to nail the sound bar format at the first time of asking?

It soon transpires, though, that judging a book by its cover is as futile in the world of soundbars as it is everywhere else.

Design

The £330 ($380 or about AU$530) M4 is a bit of a chunky monkey by modern soundbar standards. Its rear sticks out nearly 15cm, and it stands 9cm high - measurements which could potentially make it a no-go zone for some living room set ups. It will, after all, protrude a long way from your wall if you decide to hang it up, and it could obscure the bottom of your picture if you own a TV that sits unusually low on its desktop stand.

Its 1m width, though, is reasonably compact by sound bar standards, and should allow it to sit on most TV stands fairly comfortably without untidily stretching far beyond the left and right edges of your TV.

Build quality is high for such an affordable sound bar. It feels weighty and solid, and while the finish isn’t glamorous there are a few tasteful touches including a gentle forward angling of the speaker grille.

Connections are a touch surprising in today’s marketplace in that there’s no HDMI input/throughput. This means you can’t pipe an HDMI-based source through the M4 like you can with a growing number of the latest soundbar solutions. Instead, you’ll have to connect digital audio sources (most likely your television if you don’t want to have to keep swapping cables around) via optical audio cable.

Analogue inputs options comprise a single stereo phono line input and a 3.5mm headphone-style jack, but you can also connect Bluetooth devices (the aptX lossless audio standard is supported) via normal pairing or the ‘NFC’ system where you just have to hold an NFC phone or tablet close to the soundbar’s NFC receptor.

One final connection worth mentioning is a subwoofer line out. The M4 actually contains a built-in subwoofer, but it’s always nice to see a speaker bar being thoughtful enough to support the addition of an external subwoofer for bass heads who just aren’t happy unless low end frequencies are making their trousers flap around their ankles.

One last crucial area of the M4’s design to cover is its speaker configuration. And it’s here that the M4 starts to set our pulses racing, despite it ‘only’ boasting a 2.1 speaker array.

For starters, the main drivers are 65mm x 65mm Balanced Mode Radiator designs - which means, essentially, that they should be capable of dispersing sound more widely than typical mid-range drivers, reducing the need for you to sit in a ‘sweet spot’ to get great sound quality.

Bass duties are handled by a 100 x 150mm twin-coil subwoofer that uses an elliptical design to aid speed and detail, and fires out of the M4’s bottom edge. To give the subwoofer’s bottom-firing bass room to breathe, the M4 comes mounted on four short legs.

When it comes to power, you get 25W each for the left and right channels, and 50W for the subwoofer. These figures aren’t up there with some of the bonkers numbers you see associated with some soundbars, but anyone who’s spent any time around audio products will know that it’s seldom the amount of specified power that matters; it’s what you do with it.

Setup

The M4 is pretty easy to set up once you’ve got your head round the fact that it’s not exactly overburdened with inputs.

Most people will find they’ll use the M4 most if they connect their TV’s optical audio output (assuming it has one) to it. Some may prefer to connect separate external sources directly to the M4, though it doesn’t really have enough inputs - especially digital ones - to function well as an audio switch box in the way that an AV receiver might. Especially considering that it doesn’t provide any accompanying video loopthrough options.

Establishing Bluetooth connections, however, couldn’t be easier. Just pressing a single button on the M4 sets it into pairing mode, or if your smartphone or tablet supports NFC technology you just need to hold your device near to the M4 for a wireless connection to be forged. The M4 can remember up to eight different Bluetooth devices too, for instant future reconnections.

It’s a pity the M4 doesn’t carry an onscreen display, though. Such things are rare at the M4’s price point, and in truth the way its ‘colour coded’ LED light serves a similar purpose by glowing red for off, blue for Bluetooth, and white and green for the two analogue sources.

Performance

Unusually for a soundbar review, we’re going to kick off the performance section by talking about the M4’s performance with music. Why? Because it’s just so damn good.

Q Acoustics is - or has been up to this point, at least - first and foremost a hi-fi brand. But even knowing that couldn’t prepare me for the sensational musicality of the M4. No matter what music I fed it, from classical through to pop, electronic and rock, the M4 handled it beautifully.

The sound is so clean and detailed that unless you’re already the owner of a pretty high-end hi-fi system you’ll hear subtleties in your favourite tracks that you won’t have heard before.This precision never becomes soulless or cold, though. The tone contains just the right amount of warmth, and the speakers have enough dynamic range to ensure that not even the brightest of treble details sounds harsh or over-emphasised.

Bass slots pretty much immaculately onto the lower end of the open, dynamic mid range, and is light and pacy enough to keep time with everything from the perkiest of pop to the fastest of death metal. Serious bass heads will find that the subwoofer can’t swell to the insane, air-gobbling levels they’d ideally like it to, but even under duress the bass does at least always sound refined and clean rather than loose and grunty.

There’s a surprising amount of stereo definition too considering the M4 is using wide-dispersion drivers. Yet at the same time the music fills even a pretty large room with a surprisingly powerful sound stage that expands beyond the physical dimensions of the soundbar that’s producing it.

The worry with the M4 is that the finesse and refinement it exhibits with music might make it a bit too gentlemanly and restrained for a full-bore action movie sequence. Happily, however, this turns out to be anything but the case.

In fact, run throughs of favourite noisy bits (from Mad Max: Fury Road, Deadpool and that noisiest of all noisy films, Pacific Rim) show that applying some refinement to all the mid-range drama, extreme volume fluctuations and, of course, frankly foolish amounts of bass associated with action movie mixes can actually be a very good thing.

The thing is, while you don’t feel quite as aware of some of the most extreme movie mix dynamics on the M4 as you do on bigger multi-channel sound bars - especially those that come with an external subwoofer - we’d argue that the M4’s tighter but still surprisingly powerful approach is actually more immersive. The soundtrack serves the film rather than just becoming this separate beast that you find yourself listening to for listening’s sake.

The M4 also confounds another concern we’d had about its movie performance; that its lack of a dedicated centre channel might leave dialogue sounding either overwhelmed by other soundtrack elements or dislocated from accompanying images. 

Again, however, we were wrong. Dialogue actually remains clear and credible - with both male and female voices - no matter how much of a cacophony may be going on around them, and there’s no sense at all of dialogue drifting vaguely off into the distance.

Perhaps the single biggest surprise about the M4’s movie performance, though, is how aggressive it can be. It’s hard to believe that the bone-crunching crashes of Mad Max and giant robot footsteps and punches of Pacific Rim are coming from the same soundbar that only minutes earlier had been playing Pergolesi’s Stabat Mater so gorgeously.

That all being said, there are only two negatives we can fairly raise against the M4. First, while the bass sounds remarkably good for a built-in radiator system, it can’t expand as far or reach as low as a good external subwoofer might.

We suspect this may only feel like a real weakness, though, to people who’ve already owned or experienced a sound system that uses an external subwoofer and so are more keenly aware of the M4’s bass limitations. Plus, of course, the M4 does provide a subwoofer line out if your need for bass really isn’t satisfied by the M4’s integrated subwoofer.

The other issue is that the M4 doesn’t give you even a hint of surround sound, and so could upset movie fans who like the full sense of immersion a well-crafted surround sound mix can create. However, Q Acoustics has very deliberately kept things simple by not attempting to ‘muddy the waters’ by trying to apply (often ugly) psycho-acoustic processing or trying to introduce expensive extra drivers and (often awkward to accommodate) sound deflection/sound beam technologies.

The bottom line is that precious few ‘multi-channel’ soundbars do surround sound convincingly, and those that do cost way more than the M4. So - slightly to our surprise - we feel the M4’s 2.1 approach is actually rather sensible, as it would surely have been impossible for it to retain such a high quality of sound across so many types of audio if it had started trying to stretch itself too far.

While you can’t use the M4 as a switch box between external AV sources, it’s easy to set up and fairly straightforward to use. Even Bluetooth pairing requires precious little brain power.

The credit card-style remote is a bit small and prone to vanishing down the sofa, and in an ideal world the M4 would carry some sort of LED display. But really there’s nothing serious to complain about when you’re talking about such a high-quality product that costs so little. 

Before we heard what the M4 could do we weren’t sure it would score all that well for value given that it only gives you 2.1-channel sound for £330 ($380 or about AU$530). 

In fact, though, it sounds so much better than pretty much any rival soundbar in the same price bracket that it’s actually ridiculously good value - especially if you care about music as much as you care about movies. 

The Q Acoustics M4 soundbar doesn’t immediately set pulses racing with its slightly prosaic looks, ‘mere’ 2.1-channel sound and lack of any HDMI support. However, you only have to hear what the M4 can do with both music and movies for your doubts about it to evaporate almost instantly. In fact, it sounds so good that it starts to make the idea of trying to deliver more channels from an affordable sound bar look a bit silly.

We liked

The M4 sounds wonderfully detailed, precise, powerful and clean with both music and movies. It’s also straightforward to set up and use, and given how good it sounds with any source you care to throw at it, it’s seriously good value too.

We disliked

The M4’s design is nothing to write home about, and may be too chunky for some set up scenarios. There’s no HDMI support, and people already familiar with multi-channel sound systems may miss the low-end grunt of an external subwoofer and the immersive qualities of rear-channel speakers.

Final verdict

The Q Acoustics M4 certain isn’t a dedicated follower of fashion. It looks slightly dour and serious by the standards of today’s wider soundbar market, and its refusal to provide any HDMI connectivity or surround sound makes you wonder if it’s yesterday’s news.

As it turns out, though, the M4 makes a virtue out of most of its apparent weakness, and reminds us in no uncertain terms that great sound quality is essentially timeless. 



from TechRadar: Technology reviews http://ift.tt/2hXbnY1

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